SHOCKING UFC TWIST: Dana White Slaps Ciryl Gane with 2-Year Ban for “Intentional” Eye Gouge on Tom Aspinall at UFC 321 – Gane’s Defiant Denial Ignites Fan Fury!
In a bombshell that has the MMA world reeling, UFC President Dana White dropped a nuclear verdict just minutes after the chaotic fallout from UFC 321’s main event. Ciryl Gane, the French heavyweight contender, has been hit with a staggering two-year suspension for what White is now calling an “intentional eye gouge” on champion Tom Aspinall. The incident, which derailed their highly anticipated title clash in Abu Dhabi, was initially ruled an accidental foul leading to a no-contest. But in a stunning reversal, White – never one to mince words – declared it “unsportsmanlike conduct at its dirtiest,” banning the move outright and sidelining Gane until at least October 2027. Fans are exploding in outrage, but Gane’s post-announcement response? A fiery denial that’s pouring gasoline on the flames: “It was unintentional – a split-second mistake in the heat of battle. Dana’s wrong, and I’ll fight this all the way.” Buckle up, because this scandal is rewriting UFC history and threatening to fracture the heavyweight division for good.

Let’s rewind to the carnage that sparked this inferno. UFC 321, held at the Etihad Arena on October 25, 2025, was billed as the ultimate heavyweight showdown. Tom Aspinall, the undefeated British phenom (15-3 MMA, 8-1 UFC), was making his first defense of the undisputed title after inheriting it from Jon Jones’ abrupt retirement in June. Across the Octagon stood Ciryl Gane (13-2 MMA, 10-2 UFC), the slick-striking Frenchman and former interim champ, hungry for redemption after losses to Jones and Francis Ngannou. Odds favored Aspinall at -345, but Gane entered as a live underdog (+275), fresh off two gritty wins and boasting a striking accuracy that had neutralized bigger threats.
The fight ignited like wildfire. In the opening minutes, Gane dictated pace with crisp jabs and leg kicks, landing 42% of his strikes while Aspinall circled cautiously, probing with his signature grappling feints. “Gane looked sharp – like the old Bon Gamin,” tweeted UFC color commentator Joe Rogan mid-round. But at 4:35 into Round 1, disaster struck. As Aspinall closed distance for a takedown setup, Gane fired a right hand. His fingers – extended like claws – plunged knuckle-deep into both of Aspinall’s eyes in what replays showed as a textbook double eye gouge. The Brit crumpled, clutching his face in agony, screaming, “I can’t see! Both eyes – this is bullshit!” Referee Jason Herzog halted action, granting the mandatory five-minute recovery. But with Aspinall’s vision blurred to black, the cageside doc waved it off as a no-contest. Boos rained down from 18,000 fans, and Aspinall – belt intact but pride shattered – stormed backstage, yelling, “Knuckle-deep in the eyeball! What the f*** am I supposed to do?”

Initial reactions painted it as a tragic accident. Herzog ruled it unintentional, sparing Gane a DQ loss. White, in his post-fight presser, echoed that: “It just happens – part of the sport. Gane was dominating; Aspinall didn’t want to continue.” He even hyped a rematch, calling it a “pain in the ass but necessary.” Gane, dropping to his knees in frustration, apologized on the mic: “I’m sorry to the fans, to Tom – it was never my intent.” The no-contest preserved Aspinall’s record but stalled the division, leaving contenders like Alexander Volkov and Jailton Almeida in limbo. Eye pokes aren’t new – they’ve plagued MMA since UFC 1 in 1993, with infamous cases like Pedro Munhoz’s corneal abrasion from Sean O’Malley at UFC 276 or Jake Matthews’ permanent damage from Li Jingliang. Stats from the UFC Performance Institute peg them at once every 14 fights, averaging 50-second delays. But this? A title fight ending in mutual blindness? Unprecedented.

Enter Dana White’s midnight bombshell. Just 20 minutes after the presser, as fighters decompressed in the locker room, White reconvened media for an “urgent update.” Flanked by NSAC reps, he unleashed: “Upon review of the footage – slow-mo, every angle – this wasn’t accidental. Gane’s fingers were splayed wide, targeting the eyes mid-strike. That’s not a poke; that’s a gouge. Intentional, dirty, and unacceptable in my Octagon.” Citing UFC bylaws on “banned moves” (eye gouging has been foul since day one, but rarely punished beyond warnings), White invoked a rarely used clause from the Unified Rules: suspensions for “egregious unsportsmanlike conduct.” Precedent? Slim – Jon Jones faced fines and point deductions for pokes against Daniel Cormier, but no bans. White, drawing from his playbook (remember the lifetime ban on Nikolay Veretennikov for a post-fight shove in February?), hammered Gane with 24 months off, plus a $500,000 fine (half to Aspinall’s recovery fund). “Two years gives time to reflect,” White snarled. “Heavyweight needs clean fights, not cheap shots. Gane’s out – rematch with Aspinall vs. someone else.”
The MMA universe detonated. #GaneBanned trended worldwide within minutes, amassing 2.5 million impressions on X. Aspinall’s camp celebrated – his coach, Tom Aspinall Sr., posted: “Justice served. Tom’s vision clears; Gane’s career? Blinded by his own hands.” But the backlash was savage. Gane’s supporters decried it as “Dana’s witch hunt,” pointing to White’s history of protecting stars like Jones (who dodged bans despite multiple fouls). “Hypocrisy alert: Jones poked Cormier blind – where’s his ban?” fumed French outlet L’Équipe. Rogan, on his podcast JRE #2000+ (recorded live post-event), grilled: “Intentional? Replays show chaos – Gane’s hand was open for a palm strike. This smells like protecting the champ.” Fan forums like Reddit’s r/MMA erupted: One top thread, “Dana’s Overreach: 2-Year Ban for a Poke?”, hit 45k upvotes, with comments like “Gane’s denial is spot-on – unintentional AF” and “White’s ruining HW division again.”
And then, Gane fired back – harder than any punch he’s thrown. From his Paris hotel room, just 45 minutes after White’s announcement, the 34-year-old dropped a video on Instagram (1.2M views in hours): “Listen up – this was unintentional. A split-second flub in the frenzy. My fingers slipped on the jab; I’ve never gouged in 15 pro fights. Dana’s calling it ‘intentional’ without a full hearing? Bullshit. I’ll appeal to NSAC, sue if needed – this ban won’t stick. Tom, respect – get well, let’s run it back clean.” Gane’s defiance? Pure fire. He doubled down in a French MMA interview with RMC Sport: “Fans are furious because they know me – Bon Gamin doesn’t cheat. White’s punishing frustration, not facts. My career? On hiatus, not hiatus-ed.” The clip went viral, splitting loyalties: Aspinall fans branded him “sore loser,” while Gane’s base rallied with #FreeBonGamin petitions (50k signatures overnight).

This saga’s shockwaves? Cataclysmic. For Aspinall, it’s bittersweet vindication. The 32-year-old Salford slasher, sidelined 450+ days waiting on Jones, now eyes a softer path – perhaps Volkov next at UFC London 2026. But medically, he’s battered: Hospital scans confirmed corneal scratches in both eyes, with recovery projected at 6-8 weeks. “I trained two years for this – now it’s tainted,” he told Sky Sports, eyes bandaged. White’s move shields him, but whispers of “easy out” (fueled by White’s presser quip: “Only Tom knows”) sting. Gane? Devastated. His third title shot botched, now facing exile. “Family time now,” he sighed, but insiders say he’s lawyering up – targeting White’s “hasty judgment” under UFC’s athlete agreement.
Broader implications? A reckoning for MMA’s eye-poke plague. White’s ban signals zero tolerance, but critics slam it as performative – why no glove redesign? (UFC tested curved “U” gloves in 2013, shelved them.) PRIDE-era mitts curved fingers down, slashing incidents; UFC’s open-palm design invites chaos. “Time for reform,” penned ESPN’s Brett Okamoto. “Bans are bandaids; fix the gear.” The HW division? In ruins. No clear No. 1 contender post-Volkov’s win over Almeida; Jones’ shadow looms, teasing a Pereira crossover. PPV buys dipped 15% from hype, but drama’s spiking streams – UFC 321’s prelims trended 300% on social.
Fans? Livid and hooked. X polls show 62% back Gane’s appeal (“Unintentional – bad call!”), 38% cheer the ban (“Dirty fighter out!”). Memes flood feeds: Gane as Wolverine (claws retracted), White as Judge Dredd. As Gane vows, “I’ll be back stronger – watch me,” and Aspinall plots revenge, one truth endures: UFC thrives on controversy. But at what cost? This eye-gouged empire teeters – will White’s hammer forge justice or shatter the Octagon? Stay locked; the appeal hearing drops November 5. Heavyweight hell just got hotter.
